On this page you can find tools for search TCP Port Numbers and UDP Port Numbers.
Current service contain the biggest tcp udp port list. Port search going through 4 library (database),
total number of records are about 22000 (in 3 times more that in other service).
Library's:

The closest known TCP ports before 1759 port :1758 (tftp-mcast), 1758 (tftp-mcast), 1757 (cnhrp), 1757 (cnhrp), 1756 (capfast-lmd), The closest known UDP ports before 1759 port :1758 (tftp-mcast), 1758 (tftp-mcast), 1757 (cnhrp), 1757 (cnhrp), 1756 (capfast-lmd), The closest known TCP ports before 1759 port :1760 (www-ldap-gw), 1760 (www-ldap-gw), 1761 (cft-0), 1761 (cft-0), 1761 (cft-0), The closest known UDP ports before 1759 port :1760 (www-ldap-gw), 1760 (www-ldap-gw), 1761 (cft-0), 1761 (cft-0), 1761 (cft-0),
In computer networking, the protocols of the Transport Layer of the Internet Protocol Suite, most notably the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and the User Datagram Protocol (UDP),
use a numerical identifier for the data structures of the endpoints for host-to-host communications.
Such an endpoint is known as a port and the identifier is the port number.

port::1759

WIKI

TCP

no data

UDP

no data

IANA

TCP

spss-lm

SPSS License Manager

UDP

spss-lm

SPSS License Manager

Linux

TCP

no data

UDP

no data

The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) is one of the core protocols of the Internet Protocol Suite. TCP is so central that the entire suite is often referred to as "TCP/IP." Whereas IP handles lower-level transmissions from computer to computer as a message makes its way across the Internet, TCP operates at a higher level, concerned only with the two end systems, for example a Web browser and a Web server. In particular, TCP provides reliable, ordered delivery of a stream of bytes from one program on one computer to another program on another computer. Besides the Web, other common applications of TCP include e-mail and file transfer. Among its management tasks, TCP controls message size, the rate at which messages are exchanged, and network traffic congestion.
The User Datagram Protocol (UDP) is one of the core members of the Internet Protocol Suite, the set of network protocols used for the Internet. With UDP, computer applications can send messages, sometimes known as datagrams, to other hosts on an Internet Protocol (IP) network without requiring prior communications to set up special transmission channels or data paths. UDP is sometimes called the Universal Datagram Protocol. The protocol was designed by David P. Reed in 1980 and formally defined in RFC 768.